Quick Links - Poets.org

follow poets.org

Search form

The Academy of American Poets is the largest membership-based nonprofit organization fostering an appreciation for contemporary poetry and supporting American poets. For over three generations, the Academy has connected millions of people to great poetry through programs such as National Poetry Month, the largest literary celebration in the world; Poets.org, the Academy’s popular website; American Poets, a biannual literary journal; and an annual series of poetry readings and special events. Since its founding, the Academy has awarded more money to poets than any other organization.

sign up

On April 24, 1908, George Oppen was born in New Rochelle, New York, to Elsie Rothfeld and George Oppenheimer (the family changed their name to Oppen in 1927). His father was a diamond merchant, and the family lived a comfortable, affluent lifestyle, which included servants and sailing lessons, a fact which conflicted with the strong identification with the working class that Oppen developed later in life.

After suffering mental problems and a nervous breakdown, his mother committed suicide when Oppen was four. His father married Selville Shainwald when Oppen was seven. She was a wealthy and ambitious woman with whom Oppen had a difficult and painful relationship that haunted him through his adulthood.

The family moved cross-country to San Francisco in 1917. Oppen attended Warren Military Academy, where he was unhappy and began drinking and engaging in reckless behavior, including fighting. He was expelled from school after a serious car crash in which he was driving and witnessed the death of a young passenger. He then traveled to England and Scotland, attending philosophy lectures and visiting relatives.

Oppen moved back to the United States in 1926, and began attending Oregon State Agricultural College (now Oregon State University), where he met Mary Colby. After spending the night together away from campus, she was expelled and he was suspended. The two left Oregon, got married, and began a sailing and hitchhiking trip from the West Coast to New York City. Once they arrived in New York, Oppen met poet Louis Zukofsky and soon became a central member of the Objectivist poets that flourished in the 1930s.

In 1929, Oppen inherited a small sum of money which allowed the couple to start a small publishing venture. To Publishers, with Zukofsky as editor, published work by William Carlos Williams and Ezra Pound, but the magazine was short-lived. The famous Objectivist Anthology which contained writing by Williams, Pound, Marianne Moore, Charles Reznikoff, and Kenneth Rexroth was published by the Oppens in Toulon, France, in 1932.

After traveling to California and living in France, the Oppens returned to New York where, along with Zukofsky, Williams, and Reznikoff, they began the Objectivist Press. Oppen's first book of poetry, Discrete Series, was published, with a preface by Ezra Pound, in 1934. That same year, the press published Williams's Collected Poems, 1921-1931.

In his introduction to Oppen's Selected Poems (New Directions, 2003), poet Robert Creeley writes about the Objectivist Group: "However different they were later to find their lives—particularly so in the instance of Oppen and Zukofsky—all worked from the premise that poetry is a function of perception, 'of the act of perception,' as Oppen emphasizes in his one defining essay, "The Mind's Own Place." Oppen's complex 'thinking with his poems' is a consistent and major factor in all his surviving work." Creeley continues: "I think much becomes clear, in fact, if one recognizes that George Oppen is trying all his life to think the world, not only to find or to enter it, or to gain a place in it"but to realize it, to figure it, to have it literally in mind."

George and Mary Oppen moved increasingly to the political left during the Great Depression, becoming social activists. During this period, Oppen's poems appeared in small journals such as Active Anthology, Poetry, and Hound and Horn, but he soon gave up writing for more than two decades. Unable to write poetry that he felt adequately reflected the political circumstances, he began working for the Communist Party USA, serving as election campaign manager in Brooklyn in 1936. Disillusioned with the Party by 1942, Oppen quit his job and volunteered for military service to fight fascism.

Oppen served in World War II, during which he was badly wounded and awarded the Purple Heart. Back in New York, Oppen and his wife found that their politics made their living situation difficult. They were targets of the House of Un-American Activities Committee during the McCarthy era, and ultimately fled to Mexico in 1950, where Oppen started a carpentry business.

Oppen revived his poetic career when he and his wife returned to the United States in 1958. Their daughter was beginning college at Sarah Lawrence, so the couple moved to Brooklyn, where they were reunited with Zukofsky and Reznikoff. In 1962, New Directions published Oppen's second book of poetry, The Materials, which was followed by This in Which (1965). In 1969, Of Being Numerous (1968) was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. Oppen's Collected Poems (1975) includes all of his poetry from Discrete Series (1934) through Myth of the Blaze (1975).

About Oppen, poet James Longenbach has written: "Oppen's respect for the art of making, no matter how small, is at every moment palpable, and it infuses his work with sweetness that makes difficulty feel like life's reward."

In the late 1960s, Oppen moved to San Francisco where he became stricken with Alzheimer's disease. He was able to complete his final work, Primitive, only with his wife Mary's assistance. He lived in California until his death, from pneumonia and complications from Alzheimer's, in 1984.

Selected Bibliography

Poetry

Discrete Series (1934)The Materials (1962)This in Which (1965)Of Being Numerous (1968)Seascape: Needle's Eye (1972)George Oppen: The Collected Poems (1975)Myth of the Blaze: New Poems (1975)

Of Being Numerous, 40

George Oppen, 1908 - 1984

Whitman: 'April 19, 1864
The capitol grows upon one in time, especially as they have got
the great figure on top of it now, and you can see it very well. It
is a great bronze figure, the Genius of Liberty I suppose. It looks
wonderful toward sundown. I love to go and look at it. The sun
when it is nearly down shines on the headpiece and it dazzles
and glistens like a big star: it looks quite
curious...'

by this poet

'In these explanations it is presumed that an experiencing
subject is one occasion of a sensitive reaction to an actual
world.'
the rain falls
that had not been falling
and it is the same world
. . .
They made small objects
Of wood and the bones of fish
And of stone. They talked,
Families talked.

Only that it should be beautiful,
Only that it should be beautiful,
O, beautiful
Red green blue—the wet lips
Laughing
Or the curl of the white shell
And the beauty of women, the perfect tendons
Under the skin, the perfect life
That can twist in a flood
Of desire
Not truth but each other
The bright,